Stepping Up and Out! Bonner Fall Directors and Coordinators Meeting The Claggett Center November 5-8, 2017
Table of Contents Agenda .................................................................................... Pre-Conference ...............................................................................................3 Sunday, November 5 ........................................................................................4 Monday, November 6 ...................................................................................5-6 Tuesday, November 7 ...................................................................................6-7 Wednesday, November 7 ..................................................................................8 Elective Workshops & Rotations .................................................. Rotations ......................................................................................................8-9 Block 1 ..........................................................................................................10 Block 2 ..........................................................................................................11 Block 3 .........................................................................................................12 More ........................................................................................ Strengthening the 3rd & 4th Year .................................................................13 Roster of Attendees .................................................................................14-15 Map ......................................................................................................Reverse
Goals for the Meeting In the spirit of coming together to foster and sustain the quality of each of our own Bonner Programs and the collective success and impact of the Bonner Network, this Bonner Fall Directors and Coordinators Meeting is designed to: •
Provide staff and faculty with a chance to focus on ways to strengthen the design and implementation of the student developmental model and experience, especially at the third and fourth year
•
As part of this, we will focus on three cornerstone elements of that model and experience: 1. Student Leadership Roles 2. The Training and Enrichment calendar 3. A Capacity-Building Capstone (Signature Work)
•
Additionally, we will engage in learning and discussing four conceptual frameworks and plans that can bolster our work: 1. Integrating social action education for students 2. A critique of the prevailing service-learning model and tool for faculty 3. An emerging staff development framework 4. The need for a pipeline and engagement of alumni in our network !2
Social Action Pre-Conference Agenda On November 3-4, individuals from several campuses will join Scott Myers-Lipton, Professor of Sociology at San José State University, for a pre-conference on how to integrate social action education through a course or co-curricular seminar. Myers-Lipton brought his experience as a community organizer to teach students these approaches and is the author of Change!, a new book he has shared with the Bonner network to replicate the idea. He and others have been successful in social action initiatives, including raising the minimum wage in San José and developing jobs for displaced workers. He has worked to help students develop solutions to poverty by taking them to live at homeless shelters, the Navajo and Lakota nations, the US Gulf Coast, and Kingston, Jamaica. He has also authored several books, like Ending Extreme Inequality: An Economic Bill of Rights Approach to Eliminate Poverty. Your campus can still join these efforts, even if you are not attending the pre-conference!
Saturday, November 4, 2017 Travel to the Claggett Center Registration at the Claggett Center 3035 Buckeystown Pike, Adamstown, MD 21710 You’ll be able to check in from 3:00 pm on
5:30 pm - 6:45 pm - Dinner - Claggett Center Dining Hall 7:00 pm - Welcome and Opening Session with Scott Myers-Lipton ~ Walker Discuss Change! chapters 1-8
Sunday, November 5, 2017 7:45 am - 8:45 am - Breakfast - Claggett Center Dining Hall 9:00 am - 10:30 - Morning Discussion Discuss Change! chapters 9-11
10:30 am - 12:00 pm - Develop Plans for Syllabi and Readings Create and sequence key learning activities
12:00 pm Lunch 1:00 am - 3:30 - Complete Campus Social Action Syllabi and Readings Discuss resource needs, faculty and student discussion groups, and spring gathering !3
Fall Director’s Meeting Agenda Sunday, November 5, 2017 Travel to the Claggett Center
Registration at the Claggett Center 3035 Buckeystown Pike, Adamstown, MD 21710 You’ll be able to check in from 3:00 pm on
5:30 pm - 6:45 pm
Dinner and casual networking with the Bonner network ~ The Claggett Center Dining Hall
7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
Welcome and Opening Session ~ Strengthening the 3rd & 4th Years Monocacy Hall We’ll kick off the meeting with an all-group session that presents some analysis and thinking about the important opportunity to strengthen supports and experiences for students in the junior and senior year. This session also sets up the framework for the three rotations that campus teams will participate in – focusing on student leadership roles, training and enrichment, and integrating a capacity-building capstone.
8:30 pm on
Reception - casual social time for the Bonner community, with snacks and refreshments at the Claggett Center
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Monday, November 6, 2017 7:45 am - 8:45 am Breakfast (with buffet & healthy options) at The Claggett Center
9:00 am - 10:30 am All Group Session: Liberating Service Learning - - Monocacy Hall Traditional institutionalized service learning has produced weak outcomes for students and even weaker outcomes for communities. This presentation is for all of us who believe we can do more and do better. We will completely rethink higher education community engagement toward a model that can produce real community outcomes and real social change. Randy Stoecker is a Professor in the Department of Rural Sociology at the University of Wisconsin. He has led numerous participatory action research projects with community development corporations, community organizing groups, community information technology programs, and others in North America and Australia. Randy has written extensively on community organizing, including the works: Defending Community, Research Methods for Community Change, Community-Based Research in Higher Education, and Liberating Service Learning.
10:45 am - 12:00 pm Elective Workshops A choice of 5 workshops, each of which is designed to build your professional knowledge and toolkit for building and managing the Bonner Program, as well as effective campus-wide centers. See page 10 for descriptions. • • • • •
A Community Engagement Co-Curriculum - Walker Connecting Community Engagement to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals - Tidball Continued Wellness: A Discussion of Resources - Potomac Putting the Liberating Service Learning Model Into Practice or: Hip-Hop, Campus-Community Collaboration, and the Old White Guy Professor - Monocacy Ripples of Service - Blue Ridge Room
12:00 pm - 2:00 pm Lunch - The Claggett Center !5
Monday, November 6, 2017 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm Strengthening the 3rd and 4th Year: Rotation 1 - See pages 8-9 for more information • Group Rust: Building Developmental Capacity through Bonner Student Leadership - Blue Ridge • Group Plum: Community Engaged Signature Work Strategy Session - Monocacy • Group Teal: Developing and Deepening the Bonner Training and Enrichment Calendar - Potomac
3:45 pm - 5:15 pm Strengthening the 3rd and 4th Year: Rotation 2 - See pages 8-9 for more information • Group Teal: Building Developmental Capacity through Bonner Student Leadership - Blue Ridge • Group Rust: Community Engaged Signature Work Strategy Session - Monocacy • Group Plum: Developing and Deepening the Bonner Training and Enrichment Calendar - Potomac
5:15 pm - 8:00 pm Since we’ll have dinner in nearby areas, like Adamstown, people will gather briefly to talk about carpooling and for announcements about restaurants.
9:00 pm on Reception and networking Casual social time with friends and colleagues back at the Claggett Center. Snacks and refreshments will be offered.
Tuesday, November 7, 2017 7:45 am - 8:45 am Breakfast (with buffet & healthy options) at The Claggett Center
9:00 am - 10:30 am Strengthening the 3rd and 4th Year Rotation: 3 - See pages 8-9 for more information • Group Plum: Building Developmental Capacity through Bonner Student Leadership - Blue Ridge • Group Teal: Community Engaged Signature Work Strategy Session - Monocacy • Group Rust: Developing and Deepening the Bonner Training and Enrichment Calendar - Potomac !6
Tuesday, November 7, 2017 10:45 am - 12:00 pm Elective Workshops A choice of 5 workshops, each of which is designed to build your professional knowledge and toolkit for building and managing the Bonner Program, as well as effective campus-wide centers. See page 11 for descriptions. • • • • •
Engaged Signature work and the Civic-Minded Graduate - Monocacy Hall Leveraging the Collective Power of Students to Address Issues of Food Justice and Food Security - Walker Political Consciousness but not Political Engagement: “I know I should be political, but…” - Potomac Problematizing Service for Students in Providence - Tidball Strengthening your Student Leadership: Models from Across the Network - Blue Ridge
12:30 pm - 2:00 pm Lunch and Break - The Claggett Center
2:00 pm - 3:15 pm Elective Workshops A choice of 4 workshops, each of which is designed to build your professional knowledge and toolkit for building and managing the Bonner Program, as well as effective campus-wide centers. See page 12 for descriptions. • • • •
Deepening Impact Through Your Programmatic Training Calendar - Monocacy Food Justice and Food Security: Moving from Service to Advocacy - Walker Professional Development for Bonner and SL/CE Staff - Tidball The Sweet Spot: Moving Students Toward Integration of Academic, Career, and Community Goals Through their Third and Fourth Years - Potomac
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm All Bonner Business - Monocacy Hall Meeting to cover important Bonner Network news, updates, and other information.
5:30 pm Reception and Dinner at The Claggett Center
7:00 pm on Social Time! !7
Wednesday, November 7, 2017 7:45 am - 8:45 am Breakfast (with buffet & healthy options) at The Claggett Center
9:00 am - 10:30 am Stepping Up and Out: A Discussion of Bonner’s Distinctive Approach to Campus and Community Change - Monocacy Hall Over the past decade, we have been thinking and working on staff developmental pathways, which start with student leader roles and move to center directors (and beyond). In this session, we’ll work in small groups to consider and articulate the ways that Bonner’s approach to community engagement is distinctive. We hope to have a rich discussion on how we work on community partnerships, student development, and campus-wide change, one that positions Bonner as the training ground for the leaders in the field.
10:30 am - 10:45 am - Closing
Groups for Rotations Group Plum • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Brown University Christopher Newport University College of Charleston Davidson College Guilford College IUPUI Ithaca College Morehouse College Rhodes College Rutgers-Camden Rutgers-New Brunswick Spelman College The College of New Jersey University of Houston UNC at Chapel Hill University of Richmond Wofford College
Group Rust • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Group Teal
Allegheny College • Berea College • Berry College • Birmingham-Southern College • Carson-Newman University • Centre College • Concord University • DePauw University • Earlham College • Emory & Henry College • High Point University • Lindsey Wilson College • Lynchburg College • Mars Hill University • Maryville College • Oberlin College • Tusculum College • Warren Wilson College • Waynesburg University !8
Bates College Capital University Edgewood College Montclair State University NDMU Pace University Rider University Rollins College Siena College Stetson University Stockton University Tulane University University of Dayton University of Tampa Ursinus College Wagner College Washington and Lee University Widener University
3rd and 4th Year Rotations This year, we’ll work in three strategy sessions devoted to key components of the Bonner Program, but through a lens of intentionally strengthening the 3rd and 4th year. See the campus clusters on page 8. Building Developmental Capacity through Bonner Student Leadership - Blue Ridge Student leadership is one of the foundational cornerstones of the Bonner program. Student leaders not only act as an extension of campus staff and provide an outlet for greater peer-to-peer mentorship, but also have potential to help address significant challenges facing the program, campus, community, field, and network. Our current challenge is creating scaffolding and support necessary to promote the highest level of engagement for students within the third and fourth year of the Bonner Program. This session hopes to provide strategies and engage in discussion about how student leadership can help build this developmental capacity through an emphasis on communitybased capacity building projects.
Community Engaged Signature Work Strategy Session - Monocacy Hall In 2015, we began discussing Community Engaged Signature Work, the idea that students culminate their undergraduate education with an integrative experiential education project. Last year, we discussed the concept to give it greater definition, identifying needs to build it (like getting buy-in from partners and faculty). Since that time, 15+ colleges and universities have participated in a community of practice to integrate it on campus. About half of them have already integrated a capstone expectation for senior Bonners or are working to carry these projects out this year. Others have identified this as an aspiration. This strategy session will provide time for staff to identify a model that works best for their campus. Teams will share strategies and approaches, learn from each other, and engage in developing the supports and tools to integrate capacity-building senior capstones. We’ll discuss: (1) identifying projects and connecting students with partners; (2) defining the capstone (and expectations); (3) advising; (4) educational, meeting and training structures; (5) if and how faculty and/or credit are involved. Please bring your own examples and ideas to share!
Developing and Deepening the Bonner Training and Enrichment Calendar - Potomac Every Bonner Program uses a variety of strategies to develop and implement their Training Calendar. Our hope that is through trainings students are able to reflect on their experience, be exposed our knowledge areas, and develop personal and leadership skills. This session will explore how our network can use current and new tools to deepen the developmental scaffolding that supports students to take on higher levels of leadership and projects. Campus teams will have the opportunity to reflect on their own training calendar and learn from others, walking away with ideas to strengthen each program. !9
Block 1 Workshops Monday, November 6 at 10:45AM - 12:00PM A Community Engagement Co-Curriculum - Walker The Swearer Center is building a co-curriculum for our 90 current Bonner Fellows (160 at full scale) and for the additional 800+ students who engage with communities through our Center. This workshop will share the process by which we developed learning outcomes, created individual workshop templates to align with these outcomes, mapped our existing cocurriculum, and built an Intranet library. The second half of the workshop will be interactive as we together crowdsource ideas for advanced workshops that build student capacity around systems change. Betsy Shimberg Brown University
Connecting Community Engagement to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals - Tidball In this time when civic engagement is more crucial than ever, we need to approach the topic from many different perspectives and through many different lenses. One perspective that many people born in the U.S. do not know about encompasses the highest hopes of humanity: the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The seventeen SDGs are the "strategic plan" of the 193 nation states with representation at the UN, and the idea is to achieve them by 2030 - join us to see how your service is part of an international agenda! Beth Blissman NGO UN Representative, Loretto Community
Putting the Liberating Service Learning Model Into Practice or: Hip-Hop, Campus-Community Collaboration, and the Old White Guy Professor Monocacy This workshop will present a real-life example of the liberating service learning model. It will then engage participants in thinking about how to support faculty and students to use the model on their own campuses. !10 Randy Stoecker University of Wisconsin - Madison
Continued Wellness: A Discussion of Resources Potomac This workshop will provide an opportunity to focus on and discuss the concepts of wellness and wellbeing in the Bonner Program. During this session, participants will reflect on what makes up wellness – including the notion of mental health, physical health, thriving, and resilience – and also talk about some of the challenges (like stress and depression). Then, we'll have a chance to identify and discuss what campus resources students can access to support their own wellness. As Bonner Program Staff, we will discuss what we can do to promote wellness in our programs. Ashley Cochrane Berea College
Ripples of Service Blue Ridge Do you ever wonder if your work can be visualized through the "Ripples of Service"?The Ripples of Service at its core are made up of service leaders, followed by individuals who participate in ongoing or individuals that do occasional service.During this session, we will engage participants in a dialogue to share best practices and ideas for institutions interested in enhancing their campus-wide engagement efforts. The conversation will be facilitated by administrators from two institutions who have different experiences. Charmine Wilson & Adrienne Tharp Allegheny College, Waynesburg University
Block 2 Workshops Tuesday, November 7 at 10:45AM - 12:00PM Engaged Signature work and the CivicMinded Graduate - Monocacy
Drawing on AAC&U’s Signature Work and the IUPUI Center for Service and Learning’s CivicMinded Graduate Model, this workshop will explore the multiple dimensions of a strong, comprehensive and impactful civic engagement effort leading to a culminating Engaged Signature Projects for Bonner students and others. Participants will have the opportunity to reflect on the strength and weaknesses of their own campus and community. What are possible next steps or first steps in building on the strength of the particular community and institution? Dave Roncolato & Ellen Bach Allegheny College
Leveraging the Collective Power of Students to Address Issues of Food Justice and Food Security - Walker
Why does hunger exist and why are there inequities in the food system? What can be done to address these issues? This workshop will provide a compressive understanding of food justice and food security in this country. We will frame out the different levers of change and address the impactful, key role that students (can) play in being social change agents at the local level in their campus communities. The workshop will also provide practical tools for Bonners to address issues of food justice and food security. Jon Wogman Congressional Hunger Center
service-learning program shapes the ways students think about their service as it relates to politics. Then it will move into a discussion on how it relates to everyone's work. David Harker Ithaca College
Problematizing Service for Students in Providence - Tidball
The Swearer Center has developed a workshop, called "Providence is Not Your Playground" that we piloted with our Bonner Fellows and have now used as part of our training for all student volunteers. This workshop is aimed at exploring the history and relationship between Brown University and the City of Providence, encouraging members to contextualize themselves as participants in this history, and providing resources for effective engagement in Providence. In this session we will deliver a condensed version of the workshop and then work with other campuses to think about how to translate the template of the workshop to unpack the relationships between their campuses and the cities where they reside. Juan Carlos Carranza Brown University
Strengthening your Student Leadership: Models from Across the Network Blue Ridge
This workshop provides a deeper look into the student leadership models from Berry College and DePauw University. Staff from each Bonner program will provide an overview of their leadership structure, Political Consciousness but not Political rationale for the development of their student Engagement: “I know I should be leadership team, reasoning for their leadership roles, political, but… - Potomac and how leadership will continue to change in the How can service-learning program impact the ways future. With this glimpse into other successful student students think about politics and political leadership models and opportunity to ask questions, it engagement? There are reasons to expect that is the hope that participants will gain useful strategies service-learning can contribute to the development of for strengthening their own Bonner student a political consciousness and the skills necessary for leadership and ways that student leadership can political participation, but does it lead to political develop capacity for high level engagement. participation. Do students consider themselves Laurie Chandler, Michael Zirkel, Jasmine Rangel, & Jessie politically engaged? If not, what are the potential Scott barriers? This session will provide an overview of 1! 1 Berry College, and DePauw University David's research on how participation in an in-depth
Block 3 Workshops Tuesday, November 7 at 2:00 PM - 3:15 PM Deepening Impact Through Your Programmatic Training Calendar Monocacy
The Sweet Spot: Moving Students Toward Integration of Academic, Career, and Community Goals Through their Third and Fourth Years Potomac
Training and reflection are both integral parts of our Bonner programs. Siena College recently went through a redesign of our programmatic training calendar to enhance campus wide engagement and deepen our impact in the community. The voice of students in our program played a huge role in making these changes and we are in the process of assessing our redesigned training calendar. This workshop is open to anyone who is interested in taking part in building a four year training calendar, or is interested in playing a role in redesigning their training calendar. We will also focus on utilizing student leadership to increase the quality of a training calendar. This session will be interactive and a chance for Directors and Coordinators to exchange ideas and best practices. Kelly Finn & Katie Zyniecki Siena College
Our students, whether they are Bonners or not, all go through transitions and challenges that help them develop resilience and purpose in their “Sweet Spot.” This workshop will focus on Stetson University’s Bonner Program’s “Sweet Spot Model,” and how students are linking their academic pursuits and their career aspirations to a community need that’s identified through their Bonner internships. More specifically, the workshop will showcase Stetson’s approach to the Junior Capstone, and other developmental initiatives aimed at challenging while supporting students. Amber Finnicum-Simmons, Luisa De Guzman, & Kevin Winchell Stetson University
Food Justice and Food Security: Moving from Service to Advocacy - Walker Are your students participating in food recovery efforts, community gardening projects, projects at soup kitchens or food pantries, or working at schools where access to healthy meals is a huge component of learning? Are your students looking for deeper engagement in addressing food justice and food security issues at the local, state, and/or federal level? If so, this session is for you. Join this ideation session where we will discuss the work that Bonner campuses are currently undertaking to address food justice and food security in their communities, identify gaps, and design a plan of action for developing related servicelearning and advocacy opportunities for Bonners. We will also introduce a new partnership between the Congressional Hunger Center and the Bonner Foundation focused on providing opportunities for Bonners to increase their leadership and impact through advocacy efforts around U.S. food security. Shannon Maynard & Kiana Kelly, Congressional Hunger Center
Professional Development for Bonner and SL/CE Staff - Tidball How have you supported your colleagues and staff members to advance their careers and performance? What opportunities and strategies have you and your institutions utilized to further your colleagues' ability to increase the impact of their work and efforts? Given the continued professionalization and credentialization of our work, how have you leveraged resources to empower your colleagues? This session will be a discussion about strategies to create developmental opportunities for staff, share resources and frameworks of professional development within the field, and think about how we can support one another within and beyond the Bonner network. Michael Nordquist, The College of New Jersey
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Pilot Bonner link to Social Innovation/ Entrepreneurship (Bobby)
Pilot Capstone Project (Ari)
Audit/Certification (Annie) Launch Innovation Fund (Bobby)
Promote campus models & develop guides (Bobby, Ari)
Pilot Issue-Based Pathways in NJ (Kristi, Jasmine, Bobby)
Academic Pathways (Ari)
Community Development Academic Pathway
Community Communications Institute (with Fellows Program)
Intiatives Bonner Curriculum
Environmental Sustainability Academic Pathway
Community Technology Institute (with Fellows Program)
Cradle to Career Academic Pathway
Link to Social Innovation/ Entrepreneurship Program (Capstonefocused)
Bonner Community Fund Review/Training (Sam)
Food Security/Justice Academic Pathway
Issue-Based Pathways
Non-Profit Management Poverty Academic Institute (with Fellows Pathway Program) [Siena model]
Community Policy Institute (with Fellows Program) [Siena model]
Competency-Based Pathways
Local CBR Institute (with Fellows Program)
Bonner Community Fund
Sutter Social Innovation Fund
Funding Incentives
Junior Year Training Workshop Series to prepare for Senior Capstone Project
Redefine Junior & Senior Year Expectations
Capstone Project Expectation
Strategies Bonner Program
Bonner Capstone
Pilot Food Security Education and Action Initiative with CHC (Bobby)
Pilot PolicyOptions Issues Briefs as 2nd Year Assignment (Bobby)
Bonner Social Action Initiative (Scott, Ari, Bobby)
Local PolicyOptions Wiki Hub (for issue briefs, organization directory, and sources of information)
Food Security/Justice Focus
Social Action Course or Workshop Series
Social Action / Policy Focus
Create Summer Internship Database in BWBRS 4.0 (Bobby)
Strengthen National Partnerships for Summer Internships (Annie, Caroline)
Expand Summer Service Opportunities
Improve Summer Service Process
Summer Service
Strategic Initiatives to Strengthen 3rd & 4th Year
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Fall 2017 Bonner Directors & Coordinators Meeting List of Attendees Allegheny College Ellen Bach (814) 332-5318 ebach@allegheny.edu Allegheny College Dave Roncolato 8143325318 droncola@allegheny.edu Allegheny College Charmaine Wilson 8143325318 cwilson@allegheny.edu Bates College Ellen Alcorn 2077868235 ealcorn@bates. edu Berea College Ashley Cochrane 859-985-3605 ashley_cochrane@berea.edu Berry College Laurie Chandler 706-238-7885 lchandler@berry.edu Berry College Michael Zirkel 706-238-7885 mzirkel@berry.edu Birmingham-Southern College Kent Andersen 2052264679 kanderse@bsc.edu Birmingham-Southern College Kristin Harper 2054272725 kharper@bsc.edu Birmingham-Southern College Emily Thornton 2565721222 ethornto@bsc.edu Brown University Juan Carlos Carranza 6198892941 juan_carranza@brown.edu Brown University Ashley Greene 401-863-2338 ashley_greene@brown.edu Brown University Betsy Shimberg 4014405602 betsy_shimberg@brown.edu Capital University Stephanie Gray Wilson 6142366894 swilson@capital.edu Capital University Mara Sterm 614-236-6894 maraparisstern@gmail.com Carson-Newman University Vincyl Fitzgerald II (865) 337-0575 vfitzgerald@cn.edu Centre College Elizabeth Brandt 859-238-6915 elizabeth. brandt@centre.edu Centre College Gregory Chery 859-238-8752 gregory. chery@centre.edu Christopher Newport University Bradley Brewer 7575947233 brad.brewer@cnu.edu College of Charleston Domenico Ruggerio 8439538410 ruggeriod@cofc.edu Concord University Kathy Ball 304-384-6009 bonner@concord.edu Concord University Natalie Fields 3043846080 nfields@concord.edu Congressional Hunger Center Kiana Kelly 2025477022 x.19 kkelly@hungercenter.org Congressional Hunger Center Shannon Maynard 202 -547-7022 x.14 smaynard@hungercenter.org Congressional Hunger Center Jonathan Wogman 2025477022 x.29 jwogman@hungercenter.org Davidson College Kristin Booher 704-894-2298 krbooher@davidson.edu
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DePauw University Valerie Rudolph 765-658-4076 vrudolph@depauw.edu DePauw University Jessie Scott 765-658-4076 jscott@depauw.edu Earlham College Michelle Allgood 7659831677 allgomi@earlham.edu Earlham College Jana Schroeder 7659831276 schroja@earlham.edu Edgewood College Tricia Dusick 608-663-2880 tdusick@edgewood.edu Emory & Henry College Tal Stanley 276.944.6900 tastanle@ehc.edu Guilford College Audrey Mangili Waggonerar@guilford. edu Guilford College James Shields 336-316-2447 jshields@guilford.edu High Point University Mary Beth Foust 336-841-4694 mfoust@highpoint.edu Ithaca College David Harker 607-274-7785 dharker@ithaca.edu IUPUI Charli Lienemann 317-274-7535 charli@iupui.edu Lindsey Wilson College Natalie Vickous 2703847469 vickousn@lindsey.edu Lindsey Wilson College Destiny Williams 2703848065 williamsd@lindsey.edu Loretto Community Beth Blissman 212 687-1634 bblissman@lorettocommunity.org Lynchburg College Anne Gibbons 4342294307 gibbons@lynchburg.edu Macalester College Ruth Janisch 651-785-3958 janischlake@macalester.edu Mars Hill University Cindy Frost 828-689-1162 cfrost@mhu.edu Mars Hill University Deb Myers 828-689-1161 dmyers@mhu.edu Mars Hill University Caroline Twiggs 828-689-1297 ctwiggs@mhu.edu Maryville College David Clifford 502-418-2108 david. clifford@maryvillecollege.edu Maryville College Amy Gilliland 865-803-8490 amy. gilliland@maryvillecollege.edu Maryville College Anne McKee 865-659-1314 anne. mckee@maryvillecollege.edu Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey Kent Glenzer 9789683561 kglenzer@miis.edu Montclair State University Krystal Woolston 973-655 -4268 woolstonk@montclair.edu Morehouse College Monty Whitney (470)( 639-0582 wilbur.whitney@morehouse.edu NDMU Erinn Gales 3015246812 erinn.gales@gmail.com NDMU Diana Liz 443-845-7460 dliz1@live.ndm.edu
Oberlin College Brandi McVety 440-775-5389 brandi. mcvety@oberlin.edu Oberlin College Trecia Pottinger 440-775-8055 tpotting@oberlin.edu Pace University Dr. Mary Murphy 2123461767 mmurphy@pace.edu Pace University Heather Novak 9147733464 hnovak@pace.edu Rhodes College Tiffany Ford 9018433107 fordt@rhodes. edu Rider University Gregory Bardzell 201-704-3915 gbardzell@rider.edu Rider University Joan Liptrot 609-896-5247 jliptrot@rider.edu Rider University Qadriyyah Tongori 253-970-7880 qtongori@rider.edu Rollins College Bailey Clark 4076911232 bclark@rollins. edu Rutgers-Camden Chris Countryman 8562256995 ccountry@camden.rutgers.edu Rutgers-New Brunswick Amy Michael 848-932-7480 amymic@odi.rutgers.edu Rutgers-New Brunswick Claudio Mir 848-9327497 isnard@odi.rutgers.edu San Jose State Scott Myers-Lipton 1-510-508-5382 smlipton@sjsu.edu Siena College William Figueroa 347-739-9570 wfigueroa@siena.edu Siena College Kelly Finn 201-819-1426 kfinn@siena.edu Siena College Allison Schultz 518-782-6886 ajschultz@siena.edu Siena College Katherine Zyniecki 518-330-0108 kwells@siena.edu Spelman College Sheryl Belizaire 4042705314 sbelizai@spelman.edu Spelman College Andrea Irvin 404-270-5309 airvin@spelman.edu Spelman College Jilo Tisdale 404-326-9183 jtisdale@spelman.edu Step By Step Kandi Workman 3049467211 kworkman@stepbystepwv.org Stetson University Luisa De Guzman (386) 822-7707 ldeguzma@stetson.edu Stetson University Amber Finnicum-Simmons (386) 822 -7707 afinnsimm@stetson.edu Stetson University Kevin Winchell (386) 822-8705 kwinchel@stetson.edu Stockton University Erin O'Hanlon 609-652-4256 erin. ohanlon@stockton.edu Stockton University Diana Strelczyk 609-652-4256 diana.strelczyk@stockton.edu Stockton University Daniel Tome 609-652-4256 daniel. tome@stockton.edu The Bonner Foundation Kristi Cordier 609-924-6663 kcordier@bonner.org The Bonner Foundation Sam Ha 609-924-6663 sam@bonner.org
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The Bonner Foundation Robert Hackett 609-924-6663 rhackett@bonner.org The Bonner Foundation Ariane Hoy 609-924-6663 ahoy@bonner.org The Bonner Foundation Annie Pasqua 609-924-6663 apasqua@bonner.org The Bonner Foundation Jasmine Rangel 609-924-6663 jasmine@bonner.org The College of New Jersey Heather Camp 609-771 -2548 hcamp@tcnj.edu The College of New Jersey Katie Kahn 609-771-2548 kahnk1@tcnj.edu The College of New Jersey Michael Nordquist 609-771 -2731 nordquim@tcnj.edu The College of New Jersey Teressa Price 609-771-2548 pricet@tcnj.edu Tulane University Loretta Lambert 5043290701 llambert1@tulane.edu Tusculum College Courtney Washburn 9016287328 cwashburn@tusculum.edu University of Dayton Castel Sweet 937-229-4699 csweet1@udayton.edu University of Houston Shannon Keen (713) 743-8294 sakeen@uh.edu University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Yalitza Ramos 9199622084 ramos@email.unc.edu University of Richmond Adrienne Piazza 8044841606 apiazza@richmond.edu University of Richmond Blake Stack 8044841630 bstack@richmond.edu University of Tampa Ian McGinnity 8132573363 imcginnity@ut.edu University of Wisconsin-Madison Randy Stoecker 6082391057 rstoecker@wisc.edu Ursinus College Christian Rice 610-409-4334 crice1@ursinus.edu Ursinus College Katie Turek 610-409-3115 kturek@ursinus.edu Wagner College Arlette Cepeda 347-552-1123 arlette. cepeda@wagner.edu Wagner College Leo Schuchert 718-390-3270 leo. schuchert@wagner.edu Warren Wilson College Shuli Archer 8287713775 sarcher@warren-wilson.edu Washington and Lee University Marisa Charley 5404588131 charleym@wlu.edu Washington and Lee University Tammi Hellwig 5404588131 thellwig@wlu.edu Washington and Lee University Sejal Mistry 5408193783 mistrys@wlu.edu Waynesburg University Adrienne Tharp 724-852-3460 atharp@waynesburg.edu Widener University Gretchen Mielke 410-200-7897 gkmielke@widener.edu Wofford College Ramon Galinanes 864-597-4402 galinanesr@wofford.edu